Snapped off the market for approximately £1,205,000, a detached home in Little Shelford was by far the most expensive home sold in the region back in April, according to findings from the Trinity Mirror Data Unit.

Set back from the rest of High Street in Little Shelford by gating and an extensive parking area, the five-bedroom detached home was still sold below the original asking price of £1,250,000.

It was also bought pretty fast, entering the market on Tuesday, January 10 2017 and getting sold just a few months later on Wednesday, April 19.

However, in the space of four years, the asking price of the home increased by £750,000. It was last sold in 2013 for just £500,000.

Second on the list, and the second of only two seven figure properties to be sold in the region during April, is a detached home in Conduit Head Road, which exchanged hands for £1,160,000.

This figure is keeping in line with properties that have sold on this road in recent years; according to Zoopla, there have been five sales in Conduit Head Road in the past five years, with the average paid price of £1,159,227.

On the other side of the spectrum, the cheapest property sold in the region during April was a two bedroom maisonette in the Lee Court development in St Neots, which was sold for £65,000.

This is still under the original asking price of £66,000 - and if it was taken at face value, it would still have tied for second place in the cheap property stakes.

The second cheapest home, sold for a bargain £66,000, is another maisonette in Yaxley Way, Peterborough.

Both of these properties are still significantly more expensive than the cheapest home sold across England and Wales during April - a terrace house in County Durham, which was bought for a meagre £10,000 on the April 21.

County Durham has the highest share of cheap properties in the UK; four of the ten least expensive homes sold in April could be found within the region.

Read More

For a polar opposite property, head straight to the heart of London and find a flat that sold for a jaw dropping £90 million. That's not a typo - the most expensive home sold in April for England and Wales was for a flat house at the swanky Knightsbridge Apartments.

For that figure, it's safe to assume that the new owner of the property is an internationally famed celebrity, sports star or business mogul looking for a smaller home to "downsize" to - and still paying tens of millions more than any other property on the market.

For the record, the second most expensive home was a detached house in Norfolk, which exchanged hands for £17,700,000. That's £72 million less than the biggest property on the market.